A roundup of the top Canadian privacy news

Clayton Goes to Supreme Court To Defend Law

Alberta Information and Privacy Commissioner Jill Clayton will go to the Supreme Court of Canada to apply for leave to challenge a Court of Appeal ruling calling the province’s privacy laws unconstitutional, reports the Edmonton Journal. The case stems from a 2006 incident that saw a workers’ union threaten to publish video of picket-line crossers. Clayton ruled that their privacy had been compromised, but the Alberta Court of Appeal decided the laws contravene the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. One Court of Appeal justice said the laws significantly stifle expression and encouraged lawmakers to amend Alberta’s Personal Information Protection Act.Full Story

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Ah, end of July in the midst of a wonderful heat wave (thank god for air conditioning). Are you thinking about back to school already? A privacy pro from a federal crown corporation who was thinking about her own back-to-school—aka privacy education—needs reached out to me this week for advice on which certification to obtain: the CIPP/C or the CIPM. It’s a question I get frequently enough, so I thought I’d outline my response here in the Digest in case others were wondering the same thing.
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Communications Security Establishment (CSE) introduced mandatory privacy-awareness training following an internal breach back in March, The Canadian Press reports. CSE’s Greta Bossenmaier told employees at the time, “I seriously regret that we are in this situation and never want it to be repeated … As such, we must use it as a learning opportunity so that we can prevent any further incidents from occurring." Bossenmaier told staff “to review the new privacy protocol, take the mandatory training...
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In a feature for The Globe and Mail, Dentons’ Chantal Bernier, former interim privacy commissioner of Canada, writes about the “unusually high number of significant privacy law developments” Canadian businesses must contend with, including rules on online behavioral advertising, the Digital Privacy Act and the stricter privacy obligations Canadian businesses operating in the EU will face “with the adoption by the Council of Ministers of a position on the Draft European Regulation on Data Protect...
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The Federal Court of Canada has certified a class-action suit in the Health Canada Marijuana Medical Access mailing case, allowing those affected to pursue compensation, CBC reports. While the Office of the Privacy Commissioner in March ruled in favor of victims who had argued “their privacy had been violated,” the ruling did not include compensation. The case involves a 2013 mailer to 40,000 enrolled members of Marijuana Medical Access Program that used envelopes with its name emblazoned on the...
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With the rollout Wednesday of Microsoft’s new operating system, Windows 10, many praised its new features while others expressed concerns about user privacy, Information Age reports. For those using Windows 7 or 8, the upgrade is free, but some are pointing out that comes with a privacy trade-off, as has been demonstrated in Microsoft’s new privacy policy and services agreement, the report states. Microsoft Deputy General Counsel Horacio Gutiérrez said the company’s new dashboard creates a “stra...
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